Sports/Olympics / Newsmaker
Who's better than Shaq? Yao -- and how
by Sporting News
Updated: 2006-03-17 15:50
Now is as good a time as any.
It's time to call the Rockets' Yao Ming what he is: the best center in
the NBA. Yes, there's that small matter of the big fella in Miami, but
the reality is that the gradual upward arc of Yao has intersected the
inevitable downward arc of Shaquille O'Neal.
That's nothing against Shaq. It's just that Father Time doesn't lose
matchups.
O'Neal still is the most dominant player in the NBA. . . . at times. But
Yao has O'Neal beat when it comes to production game in and game out.
Forget for a moment that the scoring and rebounding stats have swung in
Yao's favor. The most pertinent numbers are 34 and 25. O'Neal is 34, and
the cold, hard fact is he's getting worse, not better. Yao is 25 and by
almost any objective measure has yet to reach his prime. In four of the
past five seasons, including this one, O'Neal has missed at least 15
games. Yao had been an iron man for three-plus seasons before a toe
injury sidelined him for six weeks in December and January.
But since his return, Yao has been relentlessly good, with the lone
exception a 6-point blip on the radar against the Suns. O'Neal, to his
credit, has been doing his thing since returning from an ankle injury in
mid-December. But his big games aren't quite as big as they used to be,
and they're coming a little more infrequently.
Then, of course, there's foul shooting. Popular opinion suggests O'Neal
hits his foul shots when they matter. Perhaps, but O'Neal has shot less
than 50 percent from the line in each of the past two playoff series his
teams have lost.
Yao, who is hitting 83.2 percent from the line this season, is Houston's
best free throw shooter and is shooting more free throws now that he has
become a bigger part of the offense. Yao no longer is willing to go long
stretches without being a factor. His selflessness, frequently cited by
critics as a significant shortcoming, is diminishing. He asserts himself
these days, and his teammates are giving him the basketball whenever he
demands it.
In his first nine games after the All-Star break, Yao's numbers were
jaw-dropping: 27.8 points, 13.7 rebounds and 2.3 blocks per game. What's
more, the Rockets were 7-2 in those games and Tracy McGrady wasn't around
for a couple of them.
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